The Pitt News
The independent student newspaper of the University of Pittsburgh | PIttnews.com | October 3, 2016 | Volume 107 | Issue 38
FRESHMEN LEAD PITT AGAINST MARSHALL
See online for full CSSA Mid-Autumn Festival photo gallery
Steve Rotstein Sports Editor
In its first four games, the Pitt football team relied almost exclusively on its returning starters and upperclassmen while battling to a 2-2 record. Against Marshall on Saturday, though, it was the Pitt freshmen talent that carried the team in the first half of the Panthers’ 43-27 victory. But what should have been a blowout win punctuated by the freshmen was threatened by Pitt’s consistent inability to maintain a sufficient defensive line in the second half. Late in the first quarter, Pitt took over at its own 4-yard line and inserted Chawntez Moss into the game. The first-year tailback took a handoff on first down and exploded up the middle of the field for a 41-yard gain. After an incompletion by quarterback Nathan Peterman, Moss then showcased his agility on a 21-yard run to move the Panthers deep into Marshall territory. “In practice, Coach [Andre] Powell tells us that if you’re hot, we’re going to keep you in the game,” said Moss, one of three freshmen who helped score 27 points for Pitt in the first half. “I was doing well, so I feel I was given the best opportunity to be productive on offense.” Moss finished the game with 12 carries for a team-leading 97 yards, one week after rushing for 47 yards and his first collegiate touchdown on only seven carries against North Carolina. But he wasn’t the only first-year player making a big impact.
The Chinese Students and Scholars Association hosted a Mid-Autumn Festival and singing competition Saturday night. Wenhao Wu SENIOR STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER
RACE RAISES MONEY FOR ALS Preena Patel
For The Pitt News
Neil Alexander, who was diagnosed with ALS in 2011, died six weeks after he and his wife announced the opening of the Live Like Lou Center for ALS Research at Pitt’s Brain Institute. Since then, the Center has been promoting quality of life research, examining how ALS affects the nervous system and supporting clinical trials to slow or reverse the progression of the disease. But the research isn’t cheap. To raise funds, the Center partnered with See Football on page 9
Carnegie Mellon University’s Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity to host the eighth annual Donut Dash Sunday afternoon. Over 1,000 participants raced — first to finish a box of donuts and then to cross the finish line. The event raised $148,547, according to David Ott and Mike McCaffrey, coorganizers of the Dash and members of CMU’s SAE. “The Donut Dash represents the best combination of compassion, competition and delicious donuts,” Suzanne Alexander said during the event’s welcome speech. This year’s Donut Dash was the third time CMU’s SAE fraternity partnered with the Center.
For $20, each participant ran a mile, scarfed down a box of six donuts and ran a second mile. Pitt Chancellor Patrick Gallagher and CMU President Dr. Subra Suresh each bit into donuts to kick off the race. After runners straggled to the finish line with full stomachs, the organizers held a raffle for signed Penguins jerseys. In a speech after the race, Mayor Bill Peduto retold the story of Lou Gehrig, an American baseball legend who was diagnosed with ALS in 1939. Gehrig was inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame after retirement, which went against voting See Donuts on page 3